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  1. Frances Crofts Cornford (née Darwin; 30 March 1886 – 19 August 1960) was an English poet. Biography. She was the daughter of the botanist Francis Darwin and Newnham College fellow Ellen Wordsworth Crofts (1856–1903), and born into the Darwin—Wedgwood family. She was a granddaughter of the British naturalist Charles Darwin.

  2. Francis Macdonald Cornford (27 de febrero de 1874 - 3 de enero de 1943) fue un filólogo clásico y poeta inglés. Fue miembro del Trinity College desde 1899, donde ocupó una cátedra desde 1902. En 1931 se le nombró Laurence Professor of Ancient Philosophy (Profesor de la filosofía antigua) y seis años más tarde, en 1937, fue elegido ...

    • Británica
    • 3 de enero de 1943, Cambridge (Reino Unido)
    • James Cornford, Mary Emma Macdonald
  3. 26 de mar. de 2024 · Frances Cornford was an English poet, perhaps known chiefly, and unfairly, for the sadly comic poem “To a Fat Lady Seen from a Train” (“O fat white woman whom nobody loves, / Why do you walk through the fields in gloves…”). A granddaughter of Charles Darwin, she was educated at home. Her first book.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Francis Macdonald Cornford fue un filólogo clásico y poeta inglés. Fue miembro del Trinity College desde 1899, donde ocupó una cátedra desde 1902. En 1931 se le nombró Laurence Professor of Ancient Philosophy y seis años más tarde, en 1937, fue elegido miembro de la Academia Británica.

  5. Biography. Born Frances Crofts Darwin, Cornford grew up in Cambridge and was a granddaughter of Charles Darwin. Her early verse was widely popular attracting positive reviews, but attention waned thereafter. She was awarded the Queen’s Medal for Poetry (1959).

  6. Frances CornfordsChildhood‘ presents the moment in which a child’s innocence is threatened by the realisation that age is both inevitable and present before their eyes. Cornford thereby uses the poem to explore ideas around innocence and its eventual decline.

  7. Frances Cornford. (1886—1960) poet. Quick Reference. (1886–1960), poet, mother of John Cornford. She is best known for her triolet ‘To a Fat Lady Seen from a Train’, with its curiously memorable though undistinguished lines ‘O why do you walk through the fields in gloves, | Missing so much and so much? | O fat white woman whom nobody loves’.